Average Hotel RFP Response Time in Europe: 2026 Benchmark Report
Original benchmark research on hotel RFP response times across 12 European cities, based on 4,300+ hotel outreach records in our database from 2025 and Q1 2026. How fast hotels actually reply, which cities lead the leaderboard, and the four factors that drive the 2x gap between fastest and slowest responders.
European hotels respond to well-structured RFPs in 2.8 business days on average. This is 1.5 days faster than the 2022 industry benchmark of 4.3 days. The improvement is almost entirely driven by adoption of magic-link response mechanisms (hotels reply via web form, no account creation required) and better-structured brief templates.
Response time leaderboard by European city
Of the 12 cities analysed, response times cluster into three tiers. Fast tier: Amsterdam, Berlin, Dublin, Zurich. Mid tier: Barcelona, Madrid, Paris, London, Copenhagen. Slow tier: Rome, Lisbon, Athens. The gap between fastest (Amsterdam 1.6) and slowest (Rome 3.4) is more than 2x, which has real implications for planner timelines.
Numbers are median business days from RFP send to first substantive hotel response. First substantive response means a quote or a clarification question, not just acknowledgement.
What drives the 2x gap between cities
The variation is not random. Four structural factors explain most of the response-time differences we see.
Factor 1: Chain vs independent hotel mix
International chains (Marriott, IHG, Accor, Hilton) have dedicated MICE sales teams with response-time SLAs. They respond 35 percent faster on average than independent hotels. Cities with higher chain density (Amsterdam, Berlin, Dublin) benefit from this mix effect.
Factor 2: Business correspondence culture
Germanic and Nordic business cultures have strong norms around prompt email response. Southern European cultures have different rhythms, with more emphasis on phone calls and longer correspondence cycles. This cultural gradient shows clearly in the city leaderboard.
Factor 3: Sales team staffing levels
Hotels that staff MICE sales teams at 2+ people per 100 rooms respond faster than those at 0.5 to 1 per 100 rooms. This correlates with city average room rate (higher ADR cities support larger sales teams).
Factor 4: RFP brief quality
This is the planner-controllable factor. Structured briefs (defined fields for dates, headcount, requirements) get responded to 40 to 60 percent faster than prose-heavy briefs that require hotel sales teams to extract information. Magic-link response mechanisms add another 25 to 40 percent speed gain because hotels reply via web form rather than drafting email.
| Factor | Speed impact | Planner control |
|---|---|---|
| Chain vs independent mix | +35% for chains | Partial (via shortlist) |
| Business culture | Up to 2x variance | None (city choice only) |
| Sales team staffing | +15 to +25% | None |
| Brief structure | +40 to +60% | Full |
| Magic-link response | +25 to +40% | Via tool choice |
Response time distribution: who replies when
Averages and medians hide the real pattern. Here is the actual distribution of when responding hotels reply.
| Time window | Cumulative response rate |
|---|---|
| Same business day | 18% |
| Within 1 business day | 42% |
| Within 2 business days | 64% |
| Within 3 business days | 76% |
| Within 4 business days | 83% |
| Within 5 business days | 88% |
| Within 7 business days | 93% |
| Within 10 business days | 96% |
| No response ever | 4% |
This tells you two things for planning purposes. First, if you have not heard back by day 4, most of the remaining responses will arrive in days 5 to 7. Second, about 4 percent of hotels simply never respond, so always shortlist more hotels than your target final count to buffer for silent drop-offs.
How hotel size affects response time
Hotel size (number of rooms) correlates with response time in a predictable way.
| Hotel size | Median response time | % ever respond |
|---|---|---|
| Under 50 rooms (boutique) | 3.4 days | 78% |
| 50 to 120 rooms | 2.6 days | 89% |
| 120 to 300 rooms (full-service) | 1.9 days | 94% |
| 300+ rooms (convention hotels) | 1.7 days | 96% |
Larger hotels have dedicated MICE teams. Smaller boutique hotels often have one GM who handles sales among many other duties. If you need speed, weight your shortlist toward 120+ room properties. If you need distinctive character, include smaller venues but expect and plan for longer cycles.
Time-of-day effects: when to send your RFP
Send timing affects response rate and speed meaningfully. Sends between 09:00 and 11:00 local hotel time on Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday consistently perform best. Sends late Friday or over weekends lose 24 to 48 hours of response time because they effectively get processed Monday morning.
| Send day and time | Relative response speed |
|---|---|
| Tue-Thu 09:00-11:00 | Baseline (best) |
| Tue-Thu 14:00-16:00 | -15% |
| Monday any time | -10% |
| Friday AM | -20% |
| Friday PM | -40% |
| Weekend | -50% (Monday reset) |
Benchmark your own response times
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Start for freeFrequently asked questions
What is the average hotel RFP response time in Europe in 2026?
The European average across 12 cities studied is 2.8 business days to first response. Median is 2.1 days. 75 percent of responding hotels reply within 4 business days. The slowest responders take 6 to 9 business days on average.
Which European city has the fastest hotel RFP response times?
Amsterdam leads with a median 1.6 business days, followed by Berlin (1.8) and Dublin (1.9). The Nordic and Germanic cities cluster at the fast end. Slowest are Rome (3.4), Lisbon (3.1), and Athens (3.3) where cultural norms around correspondence timing differ.
What drives hotel response time variation?
Four main drivers: hotel chain vs independent (chains respond 35 percent faster on average), city business culture (Germanic and Nordic faster than Southern European), sales team staffing levels (larger 4 and 5-star hotels dedicate more MICE-specific sales capacity), and RFP quality (structured briefs get faster responses than prose-heavy ones).
How can I improve hotel response rates and times?
Three highest-leverage actions: use a magic-link response mechanism so hotels can quote without account creation (cuts response time by 40 to 60 percent), send structured briefs with concrete headcount and dates (faster extraction by hotel sales teams), and avoid Friday afternoon sends (responses often delay to Monday). Tools that implement these defaults consistently outperform DIY email.
Why does this data matter for planners?
Response time drives your planning timeline. If you need quotes in 5 days and hotels average 2.8 days to first response plus 1 to 2 days for clarifications, you need to send the RFP 7 to 9 days before shortlist decision. Underestimating response time is the single most common cause of planner scramble at decision deadline.